this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2024
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Asklemmy
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Yeah because first of all, content had to be spread out across 562826 different communities for no reason other than that reddit had lots of communities, after growing for many many years. It started with just a few.
Then 99% of those were created on Lemmy.world, and every new user was directed to sign up at Lemmy.world.
I guess a lot of people here are younger than me and didn't experience forums, but we had like 30 forum channels. That was enough to talk about anything at all. And I believe it's the same here, it would have been enough. And then all channels would have easy to find content.
The instance I’m a part of has had issues federating with Lemmy.world for a lot of months now and it sucks because that’s where a large part of the community congregated and so it’s where a lot of content exists.
https://aussie.zone/post/14298464?scrollToComments=true
More comments on https://feddit.org/post/3524876
Thanks for sharing that! That’s a really good explanation for what’s causing it. I’d heard a few different parts to why it’s happening but that post makes it really understandable.
This is something I've criticized also before. It's very bad for the Lemmy network to be so centralized, even if the intentions may have been good from the beginning.
Now, if Lemmy.world decides to not federate with your instance, you are on your own.
Good info, I just wish people would have listened in the beginning a year ago. There was a lot of mistakes being made back then that caused what we see now.
We can still correct that